I shook my head.
She looked down on her clasped hands and up at the picture; not once at me.
“You–you’re going to finish it?”
“Of course,” I cried, throwing the revived purpose into my voice. By God, I would finish it!
The merest tinge of relief stole over her face, faint as the first thin chirp before daylight.
“Is it so very difficult?” she asked tentatively.
“Not insuperably, I hope.”
She sat silent, her eyes on the picture. At length, with an effort, she brought out: “Shall you want more sittings?”
For a second I blundered between two conflicting conjectures; then the truth came to me with a leap, and I cried out, “No, no more sittings!”
She looked up at me then for the first time; looked too soon, poor child; for in the spreading light of reassurance that made her eyes like a rainy dawn, I saw, with terrible distinctness, the rout of her disbanded hopes. I knew that she knew …
I finished the picture and sent it home within a week. I tried to make it –what you see.–Too late, you say? Yes–for her; but not for me or for the public. If she could be made to feel, for a day longer, for an hour even, that her miserable secret _was_ a secret–why, she’d made it seem worth while to me to chuck my own ambitions for that …
* * * * *
Lillo rose, and taking down the sketch stood looking at it in silence.
After a while I ventured, “And Miss Vard–?”
He opened the portfolio and put the sketch back, tying the strings with deliberation. Then, turning to relight his cigar at the lamp, he said: “She died last year, thank God.”